Murky, noir-inflected art rock that feels like a slow walk through a foggy city. Hypnotic basslines and ghostly saxophones for late-night solitude.
Military Genius sounds like the city at its quietest and most unsettling. It is a world of skeletal drum machine patterns, deep-seated dub basslines, and a saxophone that sounds like it is mourning something it cannot name. The music occupies a strange middle ground between the cold precision of post-punk and the smoky, improvisational spirit of avant-garde jazz, all wrapped in a thick layer of analog dust.
What makes Bryce Cloghesy's project distinctive is the sense of space and restraint. Unlike the frantic energy of his work in Crack Cloud, this music breathes with a heavy, labored rhythm. It uses silence as an instrument, allowing individual notes to decay into reverb-drenched voids. It is the sound of internal conflict translated into high-fidelity noir, where every sound feels intentional yet ghostly.
Start with the album Deep Web to experience the full breadth of this atmospheric vision. It is the perfect entry point for those who want to lose themselves in a record that feels like a private transmission from the dark side of the moon. It is music for the hours when the rest of the world has finally stopped talking.
Cassette uses generative AI to enrich its catalog. How we use AI →